"Get on the bridge!"
The officer in black riot gear was screaming at me through a gas mask and pointing what I assume was pepper spray at my head. I have covered and read enough about police-citizen interactions to know you should do what police say.
But as I looked toward the Marion Street bridge over Interstate 94 in St. Paul, I saw a thick, blood-red cloud of smoke, and concussion grenades started exploding with head-splitting force in that direction. I decided the officer's command was more like a helpful suggestion, and charted my own course into the open parking lot to the south.
KARE-11 reporter Boyd Huppert emerged from a cloud of blue smoke with a camera tripod over his shoulder and a very worried look on his face. I wanted to tell him he was heading the wrong direction, but with the smoke, the explosions and the swarm of cops, I was only confident that I didn't know which was the right direction.
The confrontation at the Marion Street bridge Thursday night was the climax of an hourslong, moving standoff between protesters and police. The group, smaller than the previous day's demonstrations but still boisterous, stayed past the approved protest permit time and so collectively decided to improvise the schedule. The police, using steel barricades and snowplows, and hundreds of hometown and imported officers wearing those impressively sinister armored suits, were determined to keep the mob on the Capitol side of the highway. By the time I left the convention floor and went to find the protest, it was on the move and determined to make a splash.
After narrowly preventing the protesters from moving out into the westbound lanes of I-94, police finally drew the line when the crowd spilled into the busy traffic of University Avenue. A volley of nonlethal ordnance put the march in retreat down Marion and toward the bridge. But the same bridge that minutes before had been protected by a line of police was now wide open. A few astute marchers deduced, as I did, that the bridge was beckoning to them as a corral calls to a herd of cattle.
I distanced myself further from the main group and was content to do my job -- observe a confrontation between police and hotheaded citizens -- from a reasonable distance. I double-checked that my RNC credentials were prominently displayed around my neck.
That's when the officer ordered me onto the bridge.